Czech television presented recently "fiction"by limiting the mention of J.A.Bata in spite of his great expansion of Bata throughout Czechoslovakia and around the world. It is clear that the motive behind these position are to create the idea in the Czech mindset that there was Tomas Bata senior who was the founder and what he accomplished up to 1932. Then after 1932, there was only the Bata "company." It made all of the decisions about expansion, investments, hiring, firing, etc. Then after the war, there was only the son Tomik.
But the problem that always occurs is who built all of the Bata companies and company towns all over the world? It is very interesting when we look at the attached photos. The first shows that what Bata Tilbury looked like in 1932, only land. Then in 1934 two years after the death of Tomas Bata -- all of a sudden on the same land there was a complete factory complex. Where was Tomik? He was working for his Uncle Jan running a Bata shoe store in Switzerland 1933-1934.
Needless to say, someone had to have given the instructions to build the Tilbury factory. All of the shares to Tilbury were either owned directly by Jan A. Bata or through his combination of holding companies. For those people seeking the truth, this is simple logic and is easily understood. For those who need to hide in the shadows and need to create false memories. They have become so lost in a web of lies that no amount of evidence will convince them.
Tomik writes to Wettstein in 1944 about "building on the ruins" but the problem here is that everything was "already built" by Jan A. Bata. See attached chart.
The attached documents will give the reader a better perspective -- based on facts.
Bata employment Czechoslovakia 32-40
Tomik writes Wettstein 1944 - Building on the ruins
Jan Šinágl, 10.2.2016
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